Secret Teeth – a horror poem #poems #horror #poetry #horrorpoetry

Secret Teeth

Trash cans ate

syringes and good intentions

each time success escaped

the grasp of latex gloves and lab coats

The scientists begged each new batch of cells

to please multiply into the perfect meat

that never bleeds or needs to sleep or eat

But they never mentioned dreaming

Upon success, the commercials assured

that the raw cubes infused with extra protein

could help save the world which was gasping for air

and grasping for another chance

The animals that survived

all hid in the shadows and pulled knives

when we tried to outsmart them

And not many things grow in the soil

where our hatred exploded

Factories followed the lead scientist’s careful specifications

to produce quiet, profit-sized, edible squares

that don’t sleep or eat or bleed

Manufactured meat slabs would never dream

of breaking free

They were infused with extra proteins

and something else, it seemed

The manufactured meat

had secret teeth that sank venom

into our veins

and drained away the people

they were meant to feed

Save the world

Save the animals

And the perfect meat

infused with secret teeth

found new houses

and ate and slept and dreamed

but they never once

made the earth bleed

Image description – photograph is of the skeletal frame and empty inside of a burned-down house

I wrote this poem after reading that scientists have found a way to grow meat in a lab from stem cells of animals. This meat production method sounds like it could be a good idea. Maybe it’s a good idea. Maybe nothing will go wrong, but so many things could. What if the manufactured meat wasn’t soulless cubes that would just willingly allow themselves to be consumed?

What the Trees Hide #poem #nature #peace #shortpoems

What the Trees Hide

Peace grows beneath the trees

that gave their leaves and limbs

to hide the seeds

of hope

from the searchlight moon

Image description- photograph is of the night sky. The moon is in the center of the photo and is surrounded by clouds and trees.

Minor Inconvenience of Snow #naturepoems #poetry #slowtheproductivity #poems

Minor Inconvenience of Snow

Outside the plexiglass window

Snow is falling

but my computer doesn’t care

The rubber band health insurance leash

snaps my body back

into an office retrofitted

with the best surveillance tech

Eyes on the screen or the algorithmic bitch will catch me

Slacking

Blinking

Questioning the meaning

Snow is falling outside

Can’t dream inside the plastic terrarium

Not until the fifteen-minute break I never get to take

Sticky film of recycled office air

clings to my skin

until everything tastes like microwavable dinners

Occasional vacations

let the hemorrhage of my discontent

bleed

When my time is up

I pack the wounds with fiberglass and return

to my capsule of misery

dreading and hoping for the day

my blood and fire are fully replaced

by autopilot strings

that type my reports and guide me from meeting to meeting

And the heartbeat of the world outside

becomes a minor inconvenience

Image description – image is a photo of a snow-covered pine tree. The branches are low due to the weight of the snow and hang down in such a way that they create a pathway between the hanging branches and the other trees standing at the edge of the forested area.

About the poem (a small rant):

I looked outside the other day and saw snow falling. My first instinct was to ignore it. Before becoming a writer, I worked at different office jobs as well as in sales and retail. The way companies and managers treated their employees as resources to be used up and discarded motivated me to seek a master’s degree in business management. I wanted to know how to explain to people creating the rules that there was a better way. In my naivete, I hadn’t yet realized that the system is the way it is because laws have favored corporations instead of people. Even now, years later, although I create my own schedule, the muscle memory of being unable to rest for a moment, to take a break, to breathe, to step back and think, has my first instinct being to keep working, keep going, keep moving even when it’s not productive or when the world outside has moments to offer more important than whatever project I’m working on.

And if the requirement of long working hours without enough staff isn’t bad enough, software designers have created some dystopian as hell products to further micromanage employees. Productivity software and worker surveillance equipment are tools meant to be used to force already exhausted employees to push themselves to the brink of burnout, maybe even past, in order to achieve the unrealistic expectations set by company shareholders and managers who will never be expected to work under such heinous conditions. Legislators in the US have been funded heavily by corporations and as a result, tend to pass laws that favors corporate entities rather than forcing employers to pay employees a living wage or make employee health, safety, and well-being a priority. Companies are allowed to overwork and underpay their staff in the guise of at-will employment laws. Workers are breaking under the weight of laws that don’t benefit them and those in power push the myth that success will come to those who grind harder, and that magical bootstraps of determination will pull us all up the corporate ladder into a lifestyle of solvency and comfort, if we just put in more effort and give our jobs everything we have and then some.

Every decade, working conditions degrade further down the rabbit hole full of spiders and jagged rocks. Politicians often like to push the narrative that we’re living the theoretical dream of a completely free-market economy and that the whole system is designed to stimulate competition and keep the prices on goods and services low. Nah, the system has been designed to keep people compliant and too tired and broke to fight. 

Laws need changing so people can have time to do more than work, sleep a couple hours, rinse, and repeat. We should all be able to live, rather than hanging on for dear life to make it to the next few vacation days, or worse, hanging on for dear life just to make rent. Laws need changing so employers can’t treat people like expendable commodities. In the meantime, may we all find ways to slow the productivity and to strip the grease from the gears of the machine that eats us while it feeds us.